Charles A. Walker v. State of Tennessee

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 8, 2011
DocketM2010-00449-CCA-R3-PC
StatusPublished

This text of Charles A. Walker v. State of Tennessee (Charles A. Walker v. State of Tennessee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles A. Walker v. State of Tennessee, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE December 14, 2010 Session

CHARLES A. WALKER v. STATE OF TENNESSEE

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Montgomery County No. 40100505 Michael R. Jones, Judge

No. M2010-00449-CCA-R3-PC - Filed March 8, 2011

A Montgomery County jury convicted the Petitioner, Charles A. Walker, of two counts of rape of a child and one count of aggravated sexual battery, and the trial court sentenced him to an effective sentence of twenty-eight years, at 100%, in the Tennessee Department of Correction. The Petitioner appealed his convictions, and this Court affirmed his two rape of a child convictions but reversed and remanded for a new trial the aggravated sexual battery conviction. State v. Charles A. Walker, No. M2005-00165-CCA-R3-CD, 2006 WL 3313651, at *1 (Tenn. Crim. App., at Nashville, Nov. 15, 2006), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Mar. 12, 2007). The Petitioner filed a petition for post-conviction relief, in which he alleged he received the ineffective assistance of counsel. After a hearing, the post-conviction court dismissed the petition. On appeal, the Petitioner contends that: (1) his trial counsel was ineffective; (2) the prosecutor committed several acts of prosecutorial misconduct at trial; (3) his convictions should be reversed based upon “cumulative error and bias”; and (4) his sentencing was illegal. After careful review, we affirm the post-conviction court’s judgment.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

R OBERT W. W EDEMEYER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID H. W ELLES and J.C. M CL IN, JJ., joined.

Kathryn B. Stamey, Clarksville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Charles A. Walker.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; David H. Findley, Assistant Attorney General; John W. Carney, Jr., District Attorney General; Arthur F. Bieber, Assistant District Attorney General, for the Appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION I. Facts A. Background

This case arises from the Petitioner’s sexual interactions with his stepdaughter, who was less than thirteen years old when the offenses occurred. The Petitioner was originally indicted for four counts of rape of a child and two counts of aggravated sexual battery. We summarized the proof presented at trial in our opinion on his direct appeal as follows:

State’s Proof

The victim testified that she was born on September 9, 1988, was currently in the eighth grade, and had lived for the past two years with her father and stepmother in Riverton, Illinois. She said her mother married the defendant in 1998 when she was ten years old, and from 1998 until 2001 she lived with the defendant, her mother, and her younger sister, C.M., at 315 Barkwood Court in Clarksville. The victim testified that the defendant “was making [her] have sex with him” during the time she lived at the Barkwood Court residence. She said the defendant began sometime in 1999 by touching her breasts and vagina over her clothing but then progressed to touching her private parts under her clothing. The victim stated that the inappropriate touching also involved placing her mouth on the defendant’s penis and rubbing his penis with her hand. In addition, she said that the defendant penetrated her vagina with his penis on numerous occasions and in various locations throughout the house. The victim testified: “He stuck his penis in my vagina in the living room on the floor and on the couch, and then on the bathroom floor, in his bed, or the hot tub.”

The victim said that the intercourse occurred either in the early mornings, after her mother had already left for work and while C.M. was still asleep in her bedroom, or in the afternoons, before her mother or C.M. arrived home. She stated that her mother worked in Nashville and left for work at 5:30 a.m. and returned about 4:00 p.m. During this time period, the defendant was a carpenter and worked “[w]henever he got a call.” The victim testified that when she entered middle school, she rode a different school bus from her sister, who was two years younger and in a grade below her in school. The victim said her school bus brought her home approximately thirty minutes before C.M. arrived home.

The victim was unable to remember when the defendant first penetrated her vagina but recalled that the last time occurred in the living room of the Barkwood Court residence on May 28, 2001, when she was twelve years old.

-2- She said she remembered the date because it was within a week of when her father came to pick her up for her summer visitation with him and his wife in Illinois. The victim testified that her mother was at work and her sister was asleep in her bedroom. She stated that the defendant placed a towel on the floor, laid her down on the towel, stuck his penis inside her vagina, and moved up and down until “he told [her] he had come.” She said that the defendant did not use a condom and had told her that he “had some kind of surgery so he couldn’t make babies.” She testified that when the defendant had finished, she covered her vagina with a towel, went to the bathroom, and tossed the towel in the dirty clothes hamper.

When prompted, the victim also recalled that the defendant had penetrated her vagina with his penis in the living room of the residence during the school spring break before her father picked her up for her 2001 summer visitation. Asked what she remembered about that event, she testified: “The week of Spring Break, my Mom would be at work and he [the defendant] would wake me up about 5:30 in the morning and he would make me have intercourse with him and then my sister would be asleep in her bed.” The victim said that the intercourse occurred on the living room floor but that a towel was not used. After having her memory refreshed with her prior statement, the victim also recalled that it “was in January” when the defendant first started touching her. When asked what kind of touching occurred at that time, she said that it was touching over her clothing.

The victim testified she was afraid to tell anyone about the abuse because she “thought it was [her] fault and [she] would get yelled at.” She stated that her mother eventually found some sexually explicit emails that she and the defendant had been exchanging while she was visiting her father in Illinois. The victim explained that she exchanged the emails with the defendant “[b]ecause of the way he was treating [her] when [she] was with him, and [she] felt that just to make him happy, it would make him do it less and less.” She said her mother deleted the emails but told her mother, the victim’s maternal grandmother, about them. She said that in response, the victim’s grandmother, who lived near the victim’s father in Illinois, took the victim to a local park and began berating her:

When my Mom found out, she told my Grandma and I was up with my Dad in Illinois and it was around my sister’s birthday, July, and my Grandma she picked me up and she said we were going to go shopping and she took me to one of the parks there

-3- and she was sitting there, yelling at me, telling me that I was a liar, saying it was all my fault.

The victim testified that the next adults who questioned her about the abuse were her father and stepmother, a police detective she spoke with by telephone, and an Illinois social worker her father took her to see. She said she was scared because she thought it was her fault and she would get into trouble. She also said that she and her mother did not have a good relationship and were not close.

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Bluebook (online)
Charles A. Walker v. State of Tennessee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-a-walker-v-state-of-tennessee-tenncrimapp-2011.